NEWSWEEK TO ACQUIRE VISION MAGAZINE [Editor & Publisher, 17 Feb, 1979]
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP88-01314R000300290010-1
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
1
Document Creation Date:
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 1, 2004
Sequence Number:
10
Case Number:
Publication Date:
February 17, 1979
Content Type:
NSPR
File:
Attachment | Size |
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Body:
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Andrew to head.
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UNICOM News wire Jefferson Award two tours in 1979
Terence J. Andrew has been named
president of UNICOM News, the
worldwide economic news service oper-
ated jointly by United Press Interna-
tional and Commodity News Service.
The appointment of Andrew, 37, was
announced by Robert E. Page, vicepres-
ident and general manager of UPI, and
L. Michael Ridder, president of Com-
modity News Service, a subsidiary of
Knight-Ridder Newspapers, Inc.
Andrew has been general manager of
UNICOM for the past 10 months. As
president. he also will be in charge of its
editorial content and' future develop-
ment.
He was a UPI regional executive han-
dling business and administrative matters
in Austria, Switzerland and Eastern
Europe prior to joining UNICOM whose
headquarters are in London.
Andrew, born in Reading, England,
joined UPI in 1967,
Ridder and Page also announced the
formation of a five-member executive
committee for UNICOM, with Ridder to.
serve as chairman. In addition to Page
and Andrew, other members are
Roderick W. Beaton, UPI president, and
Linda Vance, executive editor of Com-
modity News Service.
ADVERTISING
EARNED RATE BILLING
OPEN RATE BILLING
SERVICE CHARGES
AGED TRIAL BALANCE
DELINQUENT ACCOUNTS REPORT
COMPARATIVE SALES ANALYSIS
ADVERTISER LINAGE REPORT
SALESMAN LINAGE REPORT
INLAND CLASS LINAGE REPORT
The national Thomas Jefferson
Award, sponsored by Texas daily and
weekly newspaper and radio and televi-
sion associations and Texas Tech Uni-
versity, will go this year to a former
chairman of the Federal Communica-
tions Commission, Richard E. Wiley.
Wiley, now a Washington, D.C., at-
torney, led the movement by the com-
mission to modity Communications Act
rules and regulations to permit broadcast
and televised debates between presi-
dential candidates and other major party
candidates for high office.
The award is sponsored by the Texas
Daily Newspaper Association, Texas
Association of Broadcasters, Texas
Press Association, and Texas Tech. The
presentation will be made on February
23 as a highlight of the university's Mass
Communications Week and the West
Texas Press Association's spring meet-
ing.
Drama critic retires
Richard L. Coe, drama critic of the
Washington Post for 40 years, has re-
tired but, as critic emeritus, will continue
to write on the theater for the Post, it was
announced last week.
CIRCULATION
MAILING LABELS
SUBSCRIBER RENEWAL NOTICES
PAID-IN-ADVANCE ALLOCATION
CARRIER BILLING
DAILY PRESS RUN
BUNDLE LABELS
ROUTE LISTINGS
ROUTE PENETRATION ANALYSIS
ABC REPORTS
SMS offers a logical. computer based approach to the record keeping requirements of adver-
tising and circulation Current information provided by the system will help you respond to
changing conditions. provide better customer service and assist in planning for the future.
STAUFFER MEDIA SYSTEMS, INC.
2431 Range Line ? P. 0. Box 1286
Joplin. MO 64801 ? (4171 782-0280
A STAUFFER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY
Nathan Bolton, who has published the
Bastrop (La.) Daih' Enterprise for the
past 41 years and who has taken newspa-
per groups abroad for the past 18 years, is
announcing two tours for 1979.
The first one leaves June 26 from New
York for Reyjkavik, Iceland. The group
will do the Grand Tour of Iceland. circling
the big island for 10 days; then down to
the Westman Islands off the coast of Ice-
land where the 1973 volcanic explosion
occurred. Then five days in Greenland.
The second tour, which is already
filled, goes to the Peoples Republic of
China on September 14, via Tokyo,
Japan and into Peiping: visiting five cities.
The tour will wind up in Hong Kong.
Last summer Bolton led a group which
went clear across Russia and Siberia from
Moscow. They returned from the east
coast via the Trans-Siberian Railway as
far as Irkutsk. Then they took the train
into Mongolia for a week, to Ulan Bator..
Travel grants offered
to A-bomb cities
The Hiroshima International Cultural
Foundation has announced the creation
of the Hibakusha Travel Grant Program.
The purpose of the program is to bring
U.S. newspaper reporters to Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. Round trip fare to Japan,
as well as food and lodging for a period
up to one month will be paid for by the
Foundation, a non-profit organization es-
tablished in Japan by the Chugoku Shim-
bun and Chugoku Hoso, a broadcasting
company.
Professor Tadatoshi Akiba, Tufts Uni-
versity, who is American representative.
said visiting reporters must agree to pub-
lish at least three articles on their trip to
Japan within six months after their re-
turn:
Interested reporters should contact
Professor Akiba at Tufts University in
Medford, Mass. for applications. The
deadline is April 1.
Newsweek to acquire
Vision magazine
Newsweek, Inc., has reached a pre-
liminary agreement to acquire Vision,
the European Business Magazine, it was
announced by Katharine Graham,
chairman and chief executive officer of
the Washington Post Company which
owns Newsweek.
Vision, which is published in Switzer-
land in four languages-English, French,
German and Italian-is a monthly
business-oriented magazine directed
primarily toward executives and mana-
gers of companies in Western Europe
and the Near East conducting business
II throughout the area.
Approved For Release 2004/09/28 : CIA-RDP88-0 49OD03012MO Or1 ebruary 17. 1979